A state university governing committee unanimously voted yesterday to move FSU’s digital arts school to Tallahassee less than a year after the school opened in West Palm Beach under a partnership with the now-bankrupt Digital Domain.

From The Palm Beach Post’s Kimberly Miller, who was in Orlando for today’s Board of Governors committee hearing:

A committee of the Board of Governors decided today that Florida State University’s digital and media arts program in West Palm Beach should relocate to the main campus in Tallahassee, a move that likely means a $2 million loss to the city taxpayers.

The unanimous vote by the three-member committee followed presentations by Mayor …

City commissioners today unanimously voted to spend up to $200,000 to keep a branch of the Florida State University film school in West Palm Beach. But the deal came with a caveat: The city won’t spend any money until FSU commits to staying in West Palm Beach.

FSU should have an answer next month after the state’s education Board of Governors meets to determine the fate of the West Palm Beach …

Fearful the city will lose Florida State University’s film school from its downtown, West Palm Beach is considering spending additional money on the university after already spending $2 million to get the branch in the first place.

Commissioners insist that FSU can still thrive in the city even without Digital Domain, the visual effects company that filed for bankruptcy in September. FSU currently has 28 students in West Palm Beach, paying …

Digital Domain announced this morning that it has received its licensing from the Florida Department of Education. The school is planning two programs, including a private credited in-house degree from DDI, and a 4-year …

Digital Domain, the digital animation company that is bringing a college to Okeechobee and Dixie, officially announced its deal with FSU that will allow 100 students per year to obtain FSU degrees while studying in …